Example sentences of "is [vb pp] [prep] the [num ord] chapter " in BNC.

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1 This topic is examined in the next chapter , along with important questions of how production can , and how it might best be , funded in such circumstances .
2 This is examined in the next chapter and it forms the basis of the human relations approach to organisations .
3 This argument for government intervention through taxes is examined in the next chapter .
4 This is considered in the next chapter .
5 How such enquiries might be conducted is a question which is considered in the next chapter .
6 This point is expanded in the next chapter .
7 One of these — deregulation and liberalization — is evaluated in the next chapter .
8 The Purefoy Letters contain a number of lists of trees and smaller plants which Philip Leapor brought to their estate ( an example is provided in the first chapter above ) .
9 More information on acquiring research skills is provided in the next chapter .
10 Another major problem — the lack of availability of gur — required a significant rethink , and this is discussed in the next chapter .
11 The influence of childbearing patterns on fetal mortality is discussed in the next chapter , after certain basic rules on the effects on viability and mortality of infants and children are established .
12 ( This view of the literary text as a system is developed in the work of the Prague School and is discussed in the next chapter . )
13 The approach which I take to the subject is one concerned almost exclusively with the Anglo-American tradition , though Hegel is allowed into the last chapter , at the end of which I give some references to sample writings in the continental tradition , especially critical theory .
14 The interlocking crises of the decade , with de Gaulle as the leading player , are the theme of this chapter , except for the issue of enlargement which is reviewed in the next chapter .
15 This discussion is continued in the next chapter where , after deriving the IS-LM model and considering the contribution of Keynes to economic theory and policy , we turn our attention once more to the monetarist challenge to Keynesian economics .
16 How policies are emerging in developing countries to deal with both the general issues of the international political economy discussed in the previous chapter and the more particular ones created by global competition is explored in the next chapter .
17 Already we have moved into a darker , more specific and personal mood which is strengthened by the last chapter where the listener is brought closer to the poet to provide comfort for all the losses he has endured .
18 Yavan is mentioned in the last chapter of Isaiah , 66.19 , among the peoples to whom God will reveal his glory .
19 R.R. Darlington stressed that the ecclesiastical content of several tenth-century law codes suggests that they originated as the canons of synods. Æthelstan 's first code , for example , and his Ordinance on Charities , both say that they were framed on the advice of Archbishop Wulfhelm of Canterbury and other bishops , and the text known as I Edmund appears from its prologue to be a set of decisions taken purely by the ecclesiastical wing of the witan ( royal council ) ; they may eventually have been issued as a royal decree , but that I Edmund in its surviving form is something other than this is implied by the fifth chapter , which exhorts the king to put churches in order .
20 The use of library budgets as a key instrument for prioritizing services is described in the next chapter .
21 Production of this kind is described in the next chapter .
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